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Why? Because it was on a primetime game and Collinsworth and Michaels went on and on about him faking. As I have said many times, Goodell punishes noise. The louder the complaining gets, the stiffer the punishment.

I agree. I would also note that fakes happen all the time. Probably the biggest reason Sanders was caught was that it wasnt near theatrical enough to look plausible. It would have looked a lot more realistic if he had hobbled off the field on one leg. He'll learn, he is young.

As I have said many times, Goodell punishes noise. The louder the complaining gets, the stiffer the punishment.

Yup...like suspending Ben for a month even though no charges were ever filed because it was front page news (ahead of actual real news, not just sports headlines), while many incidences in which lesser known players are arrested, charged, found guilty, etc. go completely unpunished by the league because that only generates a small 3 sentence blurb on page 5 of the sports section.

I agree. I would also note that fakes happen all the time. Probably the biggest reason Sanders was caught was that it wasnt near theatrical enough to look plausible. It would have looked a lot more realistic if he had hobbled off the field on one leg. He'll learn, he is young.

He did hop off on one leg:

Watch the video again, though...at 17 seconds, while on his left knee, you'll see him grab his right calf at first. Then at 25 seconds, you'll see him hopping off on his right foot, putting no pressure on the left leg. Whoopsie...

Steelers wide receiver Emmanuel Sanders will appeal a $15,000 fine levied against him by the NFL for faking a leg injury late in the team's 24-17 win at Cincinnati on Oct. 21

"We are going to appeal it and that's it," Sanders said Saturday following practice.

The organization was also fined $35,000 because the league said that they hold teams accountable for their employees' conduct. The Steelers had no comment whether they plan to appeal their fine.Sanders said that he is in talks with his agent Jordan Woy and the NFLPA on they plan to appeal the fine.Sanders met with NFL vice president of football operations at the team facility Nov. 2.Sanders said that he had no indication that a fine was looming from his meeting with Hanks.

Typically, the NFL does not announce fines unless they are specifically requested. However, the NFL sent out a press release detailing Sanders and the Steelers fines.

Sanders didn't want to speculate if the league was trying to make an example of him and the Steelers.

"I don't know what they were trying to do," Sanders said. "That's not for me to think about. We are going to appeal it and we will deal with it then."

Wide receiver Antonio Brown has been ruled out for Monday's game against Kansas City with an ankle injury. Also out are Marcus Gilbert, Troy Polamalu and Stevenson Sylvester. Running back Rashard Mendenhall is listed as questionable

Last edited by fordfixer; 11-10-2012 at 05:39 PM.

Molon labe

People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf. George Orwell

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Only two defining forces have ever offered to die for you 1. Jesus Christ, 2.The American G.I., One died for your soul, the other for your freedom.

Watch the video again, though...at 17 seconds, while on his left knee, you'll see him grab his right calf at first. Then at 25 seconds, you'll see him hopping off on his right foot, putting no pressure on the left leg. Whoopsie...

I looked at it a few times. At :17 it actually looks like he grabs his LEFT HAMSTRING, which is consistent with hopping off on his right leg. At first I thought it was his calf as you said, but I looked again and it looks like the left hammy.

Ok, look at it again and freeze it right at :18. He definitely is holding the left hammy.

On Friday, "Slow Money" became "No Money" after being docked $15,000 by the NFL for what league officials felt was a feigned injury that allowed the Steelers to stop the clock without using a timeout in a late drive in an October victory at Cincinnati. On Saturday, Sanders said little on the matter other than he will appeal the levy.

But relative to where he was a year ago at this time, if this counts as a tough week for a third-year wide receiver -- one in which he prepares to start Monday night against Kansas City in place of an injured Antonio Brown -- he likely will take it.

He spent the second half of the 2011 season mired with injuries -- first a knee injury that cost him two games, then a foot injury that forced him out for three more. Personally, he suffered the worst kind of loss. His mother, Stephanie, passed away suddenly Nov. 1, 2011 at 41.

"I had a lot of ups and downs and tough times with my mom passing away, and not being able to play," Sanders said. "The thing is -- it's life. Unfortunately, I thought it would never happen to me, but it did and it's a situation that -- I've got two [younger] sisters -- I had to handle."

Football became therapy as much as it was his livelihood.

"When I came to work, it exited my mind off of it," Sanders said. "I was always taught that once you cross over those lines, everything that's going on in your personal life -- forget about it and just singularly focus. This team, and playing football, helped me throughout that whole process."

His father, Joel, moved in with him in Pittsburgh not long after his mother's passing to help him cope with the loss and, as a professional cook, keep his son's training table up to snuff.

During training camp Sanders said he felt like a new man, no longer nagged by injuries and ready to come into his own. He has consistently produced at the third receiving spot, averaging 12.6 yards per reception over 24 catches, with his first touchdown reception coming against the Giants. He hopes to improve on those numbers starting in the No. 2 wideout position for Brown.

"He's been ready," Mike Wallace said. "He's a great player, he's always been ready -- I'm excited for him get his opportunity."

Standing out in the "Young Money" receiving corps is no small feat. Brown has exceptional hands. Wallace's speed is well-documented. For Sanders, it's being technically sound with his pass routes, something that fellow receiver Jerricho Cotchery noticed while still playing for the New York Jets, before joining Sanders as a teammate.

"When he came in as a rookie, you saw a guy who was pretty polished -- guys like that catch your eye," Cotchery said. "Everybody knew that if he was to stay healthy, he'd be a guy that would make plays and that's what he's doing right now."

Said Sanders: "I've always taken pride in perfecting route-running. In college, I used to study all the guys -- even guys that I played with. When I got here I studied Hines Ward and Santonio Holmes and Mike Wallace. I studied guys like Jerry Rice. I took pride in it and it all pays off. Once you do something so many times, it becomes part of you.

"It's attention to detail -- it's like playing golf -- you've got to be locked in and focused on every shot. So is route-running. You've got to take it one play at a time, one route at a time to be fundamentally sound.

"Nice crisp routes. It excites me when guys are like, 'that's a great route' -- I like to hear that."

Sanders showed he's a scoring threat on special teams, substituting for Brown as a punt returner last week, even if he did get caught by punter Steve Weatherford after a 63-yard fourth-quarter return.

NOTES -- In addition to Sanders' fine, the Steelers also were fined $35,000 for the incident but offered no comment. ... Isaac Redman will start at running back for the second consecutive game with Jonathan Dwyer also ready to go after a quad injury kept him inactive last week. Rashard Mendenhall is listed as doubtful. Linebacker Chris Carter is questionable; safety Troy Polamalu, wide receiver Antonio Brown, tackle Marcus Gilbert and linebacker Stevenson Sylvester are out.

Molon labe

People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf. George Orwell

American metal pimped by asiansteel
Only two defining forces have ever offered to die for you 1. Jesus Christ, 2.The American G.I., One died for your soul, the other for your freedom.